New Zealand's oldest oak tree has died, at 194.
It survived fire, witnessed the emergence of one of the first mission stations and the country's first European-style farm, lived through the Northern Wars, and was admired by naturalist Charles Darwin. But on Sunday a gust of wind proved too much and it came crashing down in a paddock at Waimate North.
The tree began as an acorn, brought by ship from England in 1824 by pioneering missionary Richard Davis. It is thought to have been one of several planted at the Paihia Mission Station, the only sapling to survive a fire through the grounds a few years later.
It was transplanted at Waimate North around 1830, where in 1835 it caught the attention of Charles Darwin and Robert Fitzroy, a Navy officer and scientist on the Beagle.
Remarking on the young tree in his diary, Fitzroy wrote: 'Englishmen one now meets everywhere; but a living, healthy English Oak was a sight too rare, near the Antipodes, to fail in exciting emotion.'